Category Archives: the dance

Winter Wonder! Come and dance!

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I will be teaching a repertory class during Winter Wonder Festival at the Dance Complex in Cambridge from January 2-5.  I am planning to teach parts of Circo Folle, a dance I choreographed that was recently performed at Roger William University.  It is a bizarre and wonderful circus world set to music by Tom Waits.  This from Gary Shore, head of the dance program at RWU:  “Thank you for a marvelous residency. The work you created for our students is potent, passionate and fascinating. Through your classes and rehearsals our students became bold and fearless performers in a sumptuous circus of dreams and fantasies.”

The WWD schedule is a rich mix of perspectives and teachers.  I hope you will join me for some wild play!

 

 

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save this date!!

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I will be performing this year at the Booking Dance Festival at Jazz at Lincoln Center.  It is a part of APAP (Association of Performing Arts Presenters) annual big do in New York City. Jodi Kaplan puts together an evening of about five hours of dance running the gamut from Flamenco to ballet to my transgender dance theater.  Viewers come and go, eat, drink and are generally merry.  Come and join us!

This year I will be performing SPEAK, part of Little Fictions, Ragged Memoirs, a program of solo work that I am building.  For those of you who may have seen it in progress, I will be doing Part 3, which is new and spicy.  My piece will go up sometime between 8-9 pm.  Tickets are available HERE.

las dias de los muertos

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Yesterday was the 21st anniversary of my father’s death.  It is a day that I remember with clarity – not in its entirety, but in fragments, details, images, with all of my senses.

He was diagnosed with an acute form of leukemia ten months before.  His doctor called him on a Friday night and said, “You have leukemia but don’t worry, we’ll talk about it Monday.”  Do no harm?  The whole weekend was spent in an anguish of speculation and terror.  The disease was fast, cruel and inexorable.  We tried everything – conventional and alternative.  Nothing made a difference to his body, but to our family, to our connection with each other, the desire to support, to comfort, to help opened a torrent of love and caring among us that was unquenchable.

Some time during that ten months, I traveled to Mexico on an NEA fellowship to develop Ghostdance, a new work that, ironically, was based on the images and traditions of the Dia de los Muertos.  Working with a beautiful, bold group of Mexican dancers, we plunged into questions of what haunts us, who are our ghosts and how do our ancestors speak into our present lives.  It was also about our dance with death.

Then I got a call.  Dad was slipping into unconsciousness.  I asked to speak to him.  “I love you Daddy,” I said.  “I love you Jo,” he replied.  Those were the last words he every spoke.  I flew home in a panic as fast I could navigate from Mexico to Minnesota.  I found a seat in the back of the plan and sobbed the whole way.  The stewardesses and even a few passengers sat with me.

When I arrived, I ran into the room where he lay and took his hand and squeezed it.  His eyes were closed, he could not speak, but he squeezed my hand – two quick little pulses, which he had done all his life.  It was the last movement he would ever make.  He died about 12 hours later, with all of us around him, loving him, witnessing his transition.

I feel him around me all the time, but he does not haunt me.  There is a sweetness to his presence, reminding me to do what was always hard for both of us — loosen up, have fun.  The process of his dying burned everything away except this extraordinary, enormous love.  It reduced us to the only thing what was real and essential.  Is death necessary for this to happen?

Our runaway daughter still pushes us away, refuses to see us.  On our side, we have been cooked down to the only thing that matters – our love for her.  Nothing else is important.  Sadly, she cannot see or feel that through the obscuring tangle of her stories and delusions.  And there is absolutely nothing any of us can do about that.

Just love, Only love.

 

 

 

young & wise

DSC02980The cast of Circo Folle at Roger Williams University, 10/25/14

These are the young women who make up the cast of the dance I have been making at RWU.  They are all younger than some of the costumes they are wearing, pulled out of my costume archive.  They are younger than my daughters.  They are bright, eager, fierce, wild and curious.  Working with them is pure joy.  Thank you (clockwise from right bottom row)  Cassie, Alexis, Michelle, Heather, Leora, Jess, Erika, Lauren, Ally.  Keep moving, keep feeling, trust yourselves, love yourselves.